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Many of us have learnt to spell as a child without being specifically taught the sounds. In the past, the teaching of phonics was discouraged in schools, however, we learnt a lot through sounding out words independently. At a recent course on voice production, the importance of vowel sounds was emphasised as central to pronunciation. They were also emphasised as central to sounding out to help with spelling. Chunking (breaking up words into syllables) also helps to sound out and spell longer more challenging words.

In a pilot study, after learners revisited phonics, at 27 schools in Swindon, UK (TES magazine April 17 2015), the impact of taking students back to basics to relearn the phonic sounds and focus on building a better understanding of the links between sounds and letters was apparent. The teaching of sounds was proven to be particularly helpful for EAL students who represented 80% of the school communities. In the phonic test, children had to read 40 words, half of which are pseudo or "nonsense" words. After participating in the project, where children were taught the sounds and how to blend them through games and activities with the use of flashcards with pictures, results showed students who did not reach the required standard had reduced from 42% to 32%.

It is important to approach spelling systematically. Follow a scheme that sets of the steps clearly and ensure that learners are familiar with the basics before you lead them onto the more advanced steps. Spelling extends past letter sounds, digraphs and trigraphs. Special irregular spelling patterns (including undecodable high frequency words), prefixes and suffixes all need to be considered, among others.

Specifically teaching high frequency words (especially undecodable words) can also assist learners immensely with their spelling. Did you know that about 80% of our spoken or written text is made up of only 2,000 high frequency words? Do your learners know them? Check them out by downloading the associated resource. This list is sourced from a new general service list:

"With approved use of the two billion word Cambridge English Corpus, Dr. Charles Browne, Dr. Brent Culligan and Joseph Phillips have created a New General Service List (NGSL) of important vocabulary words for students of English as a second language . The first version of this interim list was published in early 2013 and provides over 90% coverage for most general English texts (the highest of any published list of high frequency words to date with the 1.01 version of the NGSL often getting over 92% coverage)." (access here)

Some ideas to support EAL learners with their spelling:

  • Seeing words within words
  • Syllable breakdown
  • Learning common letter patterns
  • Understanding the meanings of root words
  • Making connections to other languages
  • Words searches for some of the irregular spellings
  • Bingo
  • Spelling word hunts (looking for them in articles and newspapers)
  • Look, cover, say, write, check method

References:

Browne, C., Culligan, B. & Phillips, J. (2013). The New General Service List. Retrieved from here

Further learning - Blog

Created: Thu 5th Jun 2014

New to English can be supported in many different ways. Here's one school's approach:

Assessment

All learning is based on assessment. Children arrive and sit a baseline assessment. After analysis of result children are provided with appropriate provision. Interim progress reports on progression in EAL, phonics and writing are reviewed every half term.

Beginners

Beginner EAL Learning Intervention (EAL Intervention)

building blocks
Created: Thu 29th Aug 2019

“Scaffolding is the process a teacher uses to model or demonstrate how to solve a problem (in the case of language learning, to support learners with using the language needed to articulate themselves). After modelling, they step back, offering support as needed.”
Scott, 2019

New arrival in front of school
Created: Fri 9th Sep 2022

It's September - you come in for your inset day, and find out that you have two new starters in your class. One is an English as an Additional Language (EAL) new arrival. What does this mean - for them and for you?

What is a new arrival?

"New arrivals can be described as: